well, I usually give more polite comments but I hate it when someone votes for his/hers ad.

and as I said few times before:
posting your ad here and starting to scream how brilliant it is will not make ad any better. only hard work will.
and if you're lucky and intelligent enough some of the criticism posted from people here can help you make it better or at least avoid some mistakes next time.

Stavros
I dont agree on the agresive manner of the other coments, but still, the idea is really bad.
The image is such a cliche, the concept is so so used. There is nothing new, fresh or inovative in this campaign. I belive this site is destinated to good fresh and inovative ads. This definetively does not meet this standards.

Wow Stavros, you and Ad Judge (who's most definitely NOT from Greece, says he) are pretty defensive about the mediocre work posted here. I take it this work comes from your agency, or is it your own work, or both? Sad. So someone doesn't like the work and you insult them? That's pathetic. But not quite as pathetic as the work.

first of all, that's not the whole idea, um, duh. the idea is clearly about the celebration of MODERN dogma, and how ridiculous it is, and that this station doesn't participate in celebrating said current dogma. the actual word (whether celebrity, celebritism, starlet, etc) is really of little importance. By which I mean the idea isn't dependent on the word 'celebritism' as you seem to so arrogantly think.

because if they're renouncing the idea of modern dogma, using a word currently not in use would be confusing, especially since every other cue your given in this ad is of a MODERN setting (modern car, modern cameras, little dog (ala paris hilton)), not some romanticized or retro-viewed past.

and, not to mention, you're also just flat out wrong. celebritism isn't a "not currently used word," it's not a word at all. which would back up what i said earlier about the importance of the word - they could have used or made up any word they wanted to.

Was this intended as the visual and title for some marie-claire editorial? Still, it would have been quite mediocre as it does nothing but state the obvious, or should I say "speak to the converted" (thanks jamespatrick (?) 101, you warrior for misunderstood concepts, I finally realised that "the idea is clearly about the celebration of MODERN dogma"). Yeah, yeah, people are obsessed with celebrities, plastic ops, trash culture etc... alors?
Surely not an ad campaign?

Not all Greek creatives find these lame ads outstanding. Not all Greek creatives call their friends in UK to comment "finally, something creative on this site", the audacity of this! And finally not all Greek creatives shout, insult and whine instead of getting positive feedback from some of the best commentators in the industry.